Page:Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure (1749, vol. 1).pdf/200

 bodies, (insomuch that the hair on both sides perfectly interweav'd, and incircl'd, together), the eyes of the transported youth sparkl'd with more joyous fires, and all his looks and motions acknowledg'd excess of pleasure, which I now began to share, for I felt him in my very vitals! I was quite sick with delight! stir'd beyond bearing with its furious agitations within me, and gorg'd and cram'd even to surfeit: thus I lay gasping, panting, under him, till his broken breathings, faltering accents, eyes twinkling with humid fires, lunges more furious, and an encreased stiffness, gave me to hail the approaches of the second period:it came, and the sweet youth, overpower'd with the extasy, died away in my arms, melting in a flood, that shot in genial warmth into the innermost recesses of my body, every conduit of which, dedicated to that pleasure, was on flow to mix with it: thus we continu'd for some instants, lost, breathless, senseless of every thing, and in every part, but those favourite ones of nature, in which all that we enjoy'd of life and sensation, was now totally concenter'd.

When our mutual trance was a little over, and the young fellow had withdrawn that